Hello everyone! I have some questions about early 19th century half-stock flintlock "plains rifles" as it were. Really, my main question is, did these even really exist? I understand that some English sporting rifles of that period were around but probably not used by most people out west in the fur trade and pioneer days.
I have a Lyman Great Plains .54 caliber rifle in flintlock. As of now, it's my only flintlock rifle. I just am curious if the design has any historical basis at all. I know the Lyman GPR is loosely based on the J&S Hawken pattern plains rifle, and also know that nobody has ever found a half-stock J&S Hawken gun with a flintlock mechanism. But were there other makers during that time who were producing half-stocked "plains" style rifles before or during the percussion era?
Smokey,
The simple answer is if they existed, they were scarce because very few examples survive today.
Fashion, style, and trends in guns have been around for a long time. The trend from a wide, straight butt plate of the 18th century to the curved, narrow butt plate of the 19th century appears impracticable today, but that was what became popular.
The wealthy English were buying half stock guns and rifles in the mid to late 18th century, but the style wasn't popular in the USA until the mid 19th century--about the same time the percussion system was becoming popular.
The Harper's Ferry Model 1803 has been mentioned. The fact that Jacob Hawken had worked at Harper's Ferry before moving to St. Louis opens the door for a lot of speculation on how the 1803 may have influenced the Hawken mountain rifle.
Not a lot has been written about another possibility concerning the HP 1803, though. That is the likelihood of a gunstocker using parts from an 1803 as the basis for a sporting arm. Jim Gordon has such a rifle in his collection.
This rifle has been restocked and re-barreled with a full octagon barrel, but otherwise, built with parts from an HP 1803.
One of the more intriguing features of the rifle is the beaver tail cheekpiece.
The history on this rifle has been lost with the passage of time, and we don't know who built it or when, but it was most likely built in the flintlock period.
Some of the early HP 1803's were prone to having their barrels burst. Pike made note of this in his journals. It seems natural that a gunstocker in some place like St. Louis may have taken salvageable parts from one of these damaged 1803's and built the rifle above. The fact that some one had this idea means that Jacob Hawken could have also had the same or similar idea.
In any event, the rifle above shows that sporting half-stock flintlock rifles may have made their way to the West in the early part of the 1800's. Such rifles may have also been the inspiration for the Hawken bothers famous half-stock mountain rifle and variations such as your GPR.